Interesting update from StandX with the launch of Network Yield.
At first I thought it was just another referral layer.
But it’s actually a bit more flexible than that.
Previously, referrals were fixed .
people signing up through your link would receive bonus points, while a percentage flowed back to the referrer automatically.
Now the system lets you customize the split yourself.
So instead of maximizing what I receive, I adjusted mine to prioritize the people using the referral instead.
I could take the full percentage.
But I’d rather let others keep most of the upside and only retain a small portion for myself.
Feels healthier for long term participation that way.
Especially because the point system is about to become significantly harder after the upcoming “halving” adjustment.
Which means timing probably matters more than people think right now.
The broader idea here is what caught my attention though:
@StandX_Official is slowly turning participation itself into part of the protocol economy.
• Trading.
• Referrals.
• Yield routing.
• Point systems.
Everything is starting to connect into the same incentive layer.
Still early, obviously.
But the structure underneath it is becoming much more interesting over time.
Good Morning 💕
I’d stay like this forever but someone’s already demanding breakfast. Being held hostage by this fluff ball is a fulltime job.
Who else is currently being held hostage by their cat?
SIP-3 quietly changed what $DUSD actually is.
Before, it mostly functioned as a settlement asset inside the StandX ecosystem.
Now it’s starting to behave more like a yield layer tied directly to protocol activity.
After rebates, a portion of net fees gets routed back into the DUSD yield pool automatically.
Whether DUSD sits in a wallet, LP position, BNB Chain, or Solana, the system is designed so value can still flow back across the network.
So instead of idle capital sitting around, protocol activity continuously feeds back into holders.
In practice, it creates a flywheel:
more trading activity
→ more fees generated
→ higher DUSD yield
→ deeper liquidity & margin capacity
→ more trading activity again
Simple structure.
But potentially powerful if volume continues scaling.
Of course, systems like this still depend heavily on sustainable trading activity and healthy liquidity conditions over time.
But structurally, SIP-3 feels like the point where @StandX_Official stopped focusing only on trading and start rebuilding the economic layer underneath the asset itself.
Structured incentives = key to DeFi retention.
StandX showing how it’s done with a “Triple Yield Stack” → 10.71% APY on $DUSD
Not just about high APY. It’s the design:
• Base yield • + SIP 2-3 incentives • Fully integrated into the Perps interface
Seamless , Composable , Sticky
This is the kind of yield innovation that drives real, sustainable adoption.
Triple yield on StandX looks good.
• base yield → from underlying collateral
• position → earn extra yield even while using $DUSD in perps
• SIP-3 → part of protocol revenue shared back to $DUSD holders
At this stage, holding $DUSD feels fairly simple, you’re earning ~8%+ yield passively plus potential upside if TGE-related incentives do come in.
What SIP-3 really introduces is this simple shift:
When demand increases, yield follows. When it slows, it naturally cools down.
@StandX_Official
StandX traders now get triple $DUSD yield.
• Base yield
• Position yield
• SIP-3 yield
At first glance, it sounds like just more rewards stacked on top of each other.
But if you break it down a bit, it’s actually coming from three different places in the system.
👉 Base yield
This is the simplest one.
Just holding or staking $DUSD and earning from the core structure behind it.
👉 Position yield
This one comes from how you actually use the platform.
When you trade or take positions, your activity contributes to additional returns.
👉 SIP-3 yield
This is the newer layer after the upgrade.
It comes from the protocol side. things like fee sharing and ecosystem incentives that are now being redistributed back to users.
So instead of one source of yield, it’s really three different flows working together:
hold → use → participate.
It feels more like a system where what you do inside the protocol actually shapes what you earn.
@StandX_Official
StandX just shipped SIP-3 and it’s a meaningful shift for $DUSD.
Not just more yield.
It’s a new source of yield layered on top.
What changed :
• perps fees now feed into the system
• stacked on existing market-neutral strategies
• usage → revenue → distribution
The more the platform is used, the more flows back to holders.
That universal distribution angle is interesting too.
Yield isn’t gated, but it’s propagated across all wallets.
My take : this is about aligning product usage with holder returns.
Curious to see if volume can sustain the model over time .
@StandX_Official